Tom Donohue of leading a dark cult to enslave the human race like high priest Mola Ram in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. But Bill McKibben seems to think that Donohue has cast an evil spell over his country's young ruler in order to make him do his bidding.

Bill McKibben and the Temple of Doom

Jobs? There's one job the US Chamber of Commerce has done better than anyone: warming the planet. Photo: ElvertBarnes via Flickr.

Nobody's yet accused Tom Donohue of leading a dark cult to enslave the human race like high priest Mola Ram in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. But Bill McKibben seems to think that Donohue has cast an evil spell over his country's young ruler in order to make him do his bidding.

While candidate Obama promised to make climate change one of his two top issues, President Obama has been acting more and more like a minion of Donohue's outfit, the US Chamber of Commerce, which lobbies on behalf of the nation's biggest polluters.

Not only did Obama fail to put his muscle behind last year's effort to pass the most timid possible climate bill, but since then he's pushed nukes, drilling and mining in a way that would make Newt Gingrich blush. And just two weeks ago, the White House opened up 750 million tons of coal under federal land in Wyoming to mining. "That's like opening 300 new coal-fired power plants and running them for a year," says McKibben. "That's a disgrace."

Makes the Koch brothers look piddly

When it comes to funding climate-science deniers, if the Koch brothers are "high peaks of corruption, then the US Chamber of Commerce is the Everest of dirty money," says McKibben. With its office right across from the White House, the Chamber is the nation's largest lobbying group. It spends more on politics than the Democratic and Republican national committees put together.

The Chamber spent $32 million on the 2010 elections and 94% of that went to candidates who are climate deniers. And that's because the good folks at the chamber just aren't that worried about global warming.

"Populations can acclimatize via a range of behavioral, physiological, and technological adaptations," the Chamber said in comments to the EPA in 2009.

Physiological changes? McKibben wonders if the Chamber means we'll have to grow gills.

The science is easy but the politics is hard

With 2010 tied for the warmest year on record, the science is clear: Climate change is real, it's caused by humans and it's happening faster than anyone predicted. It's not a problem for our grandkids. It's a problem for us.

Scientists agree that the only hope to preserve a climate on Earth similar to the one in which human civilization developed is to cut carbon dioxide in the atmosphere back down to 350 parts per million. It'll be the toughest thing that humans have ever done, says McKibben. But we already have the technology. What we need is the politics.

Reaching 350 will require the US and other rich countries to act. It's not enough to have Vanuatu and the Seychelles sign on to cut their carbon pollution. The cuts need to come from countries that really pollute -- Europe, China, India, Russia and most of all, the United States.

But the US won't act as long as there's so much pollution in Washington -- money pollution, that is. Big Oil, Big Coal and other big polluting industries don't want to cut their carbon because that would eat into their profits. So, working through the US Chamber of Commerce, big polluters pressure the White House and Congress to do nothing about climate change. And so far, it's worked.

Given the power of this plutocracy, it's understandable that many people who care about climate, especially those who also care about peak oil, have given up on Washington. They're just waiting for the place to collapse while they prepare their communities and families for a post-peak world.

It's one thing to brace for peak oil. But quite another to have any hope to "prepare" for climate change.

Think you can climate-proof your house or your town?

Unless there's total armed anarchy, family survivalism or community resilience might work out OK to get ready for a world of $10 gas or daily power outages. But there's nothing you can do in your home or your town to prepare for climate change except move somewhere you think might fare better. And even that's a crap shoot.

Sure, Canada might become the breadbasket of the world if their climate becomes more like North Carolina's. But what if, as in the movie The Day After Tomorrow, the Gulf Stream shuts off and the global north is hit by a new ice age that covers every place north of the Mason-Dixon Line in a 200-foot glacier?

It seems even riskier to try to ride out climate catastrophe somewhere in the future than to try to prevent that catastrophe today.

And that means citizens trying to break the stranglehold of big money over climate policy. Of course, it won't be easy. But what else can we do?

If you were a betting person you might bet that we were going to lose, because so far that's what's happened. But that's not a bet you're allowed to make. The only thing that a morally awake person can do when the worst thing that can happen is happening is to try to change those odds.

Editorial Notes: Erik Curren is the publisher of Transition Voice. With his wife Lindsay Curren he co-founded Transition Staunton Augusta in January 2010. He is managing partner of the Curren Media Group.

Erik Curren is the publisher of Transition Voice. He co-founded Transition Staunton Augusta in December 2009 and serves as managing partner of the Curren Media Group, an online marketing company. He is also …

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